To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

! guUME I66
BY TADIEO]I DUDLEY
Editor-in-Chief
news@thedepauw,com
ESPN founder and 1954
DePauw University graduate,
Bill Rasmussen, will co'me
back to campus to speak as
the 109th Ubben Lecture.
The lecture will take place on
Nov.8 at7:30 p.m. in Kresge
Auditorium. Admission is freq
to all.
Rasmussen will spend the
week on campus leading up to
the Monon Bell football game
on Nov. 11. "I always imagined
him at Monon week," said
Ken Owen, special adviser
to the University President
and coordinator of the Ubben
Lecture series. "It's a great
time to put it all together."
ESPN was founded as
the first 24-hour sports news
network and is now a multi
billion dollar cross platform
company. ESPN is ranked
number 32 on the Forbes list
of most valued brands.
His talk will focus on ESPN,
his time at DePauw, and the
importance of developing
ideãs that can change the
game. "There's still lots or
ioom for new ideas," Owen
said, and he hopes Rasmussen
will inspire DePauw students
to create the next big thing.
Rasmussen spoke at
the 125th commencement
ceremony and, according to
Owen, is excited to come
back. Even though this is not
Rasmussen's first return to
DePauw, it will be different
from many of his previous
WHDNIISDAY SEPTEMBHII 2{r, uQtY
ô @
R
E
@
@theDePauw
The DePauw
@theDePauw
Å
thedepauw.com
ESPN founder Bilt Rasmlls-sen
to be next ïJbben Lecture
celebrate high holy
visits. This lecture should be
the most immersive lecture yet, according to Owen,
because Rasmussen will be
on campus from MondaY
through the Monon Bell game.
He plans on meeting with
studénts in the fellowshiP and
scholarship programs along
with other opportunities to
meet and work with students.
Rasmussen's lecture shows
the ties that DePauw keePs
with its alumni. "He is coming
Sports'weekend
f.ã#9Jiew
White National-ist
Stickers found
near campus
ESPN founderBill Rasmussen wlll speak to DePauw Stu&nfs as ft e
iert lJbtnn Lecturc, November &ttt.'PHOTO COURTESY DEPAUW
UNIVERSITY
Stickers and business
cards for white nation-alist
groups \ilere found
around public streets that
run through campus.
Public Safety sent a
campus-l'vide email a lit-tle
after 6:30 p.m. on
Monday, after the stick-ers
were removed for not
complying with the Uni-versity's
posting policy.
The stickers lvere dis-covered
by a community
member who reported
what they found to Pubic
Safety. They were found
on Hannah, Indiana,
Seminary and Anderson
Str€ets.
Director of Public
Safety, Angella Nally,
told The DePauw via
email that Public Safety
had found six stickers
and t$/o business cards
with the group's logo and
name. Four of the stickers
were found on the backs'
of signs, one was found
on a utility pole, and one
on a utility box next to
the street. The business
cards were found in the
grass next to an interior
sidewalk. All items were
located on public proP-erty,
not DePauw Univer-on
his orvn time," and is oPen
to everything, said Owen.
"To say that this is an
exceptional opportunity would
be a definite understatement,"
said senior Robert Sherman,
"not only will Media Fellows
benefit from interacting with
one of the best in the industrY,
but Management Fellows and
budding entrepreneurs will get
to meet the man who turned
a 2417 sports channel into a
multi billion dollar brand."
news@thedepauw.com
sity owned grounds.
Nally would not re-lease
the name of the or-ganization,
in an action
iimilar to other univer-sities
who have found
white nationalists adver-tisements
around their
campuses, as a way to
prevent publicizing the
group's agenda. The logo
founil on the items posted
on DePauw's campus was
a set of triangles.
On the same day, the
Journal Courier reported
that white-nationalist alt-right
group, Identity Ev-ropa,
plastered posters
and fliérs around Purdue
University on Sunday.
Identity Evropa formed
in 2016 and has begun a
public campaign aimed at
universities called "Pro- ject Siege" where the
þroup hoþes for the "be-ginning
of a long-term
õultural war of attrition
aeainst academia's Cul-türal
Marxist narrative,"
according to their web-site;
Identity Evropa's
logo is a set of triangles.
"There is no place in
the world for white na-tionalists
or anti sem-ites,"
President Mark Mc-
Coy said.
TDP llll l)l l),\l'\\'

! guUME I66
BY TADIEO]I DUDLEY
Editor-in-Chief
news@thedepauw,com
ESPN founder and 1954
DePauw University graduate,
Bill Rasmussen, will co'me
back to campus to speak as
the 109th Ubben Lecture.
The lecture will take place on
Nov.8 at7:30 p.m. in Kresge
Auditorium. Admission is freq
to all.
Rasmussen will spend the
week on campus leading up to
the Monon Bell football game
on Nov. 11. "I always imagined
him at Monon week," said
Ken Owen, special adviser
to the University President
and coordinator of the Ubben
Lecture series. "It's a great
time to put it all together."
ESPN was founded as
the first 24-hour sports news
network and is now a multi
billion dollar cross platform
company. ESPN is ranked
number 32 on the Forbes list
of most valued brands.
His talk will focus on ESPN,
his time at DePauw, and the
importance of developing
ideãs that can change the
game. "There's still lots or
ioom for new ideas," Owen
said, and he hopes Rasmussen
will inspire DePauw students
to create the next big thing.
Rasmussen spoke at
the 125th commencement
ceremony and, according to
Owen, is excited to come
back. Even though this is not
Rasmussen's first return to
DePauw, it will be different
from many of his previous
WHDNIISDAY SEPTEMBHII 2{r, uQtY
ô @
R
E
@
@theDePauw
The DePauw
@theDePauw
Å
thedepauw.com
ESPN founder Bilt Rasmlls-sen
to be next ïJbben Lecture
celebrate high holy
visits. This lecture should be
the most immersive lecture yet, according to Owen,
because Rasmussen will be
on campus from MondaY
through the Monon Bell game.
He plans on meeting with
studénts in the fellowshiP and
scholarship programs along
with other opportunities to
meet and work with students.
Rasmussen's lecture shows
the ties that DePauw keePs
with its alumni. "He is coming
Sports'weekend
f.ã#9Jiew
White National-ist
Stickers found
near campus
ESPN founderBill Rasmussen wlll speak to DePauw Stu&nfs as ft e
iert lJbtnn Lecturc, November &ttt.'PHOTO COURTESY DEPAUW
UNIVERSITY
Stickers and business
cards for white nation-alist
groups \ilere found
around public streets that
run through campus.
Public Safety sent a
campus-l'vide email a lit-tle
after 6:30 p.m. on
Monday, after the stick-ers
were removed for not
complying with the Uni-versity's
posting policy.
The stickers lvere dis-covered
by a community
member who reported
what they found to Pubic
Safety. They were found
on Hannah, Indiana,
Seminary and Anderson
Str€ets.
Director of Public
Safety, Angella Nally,
told The DePauw via
email that Public Safety
had found six stickers
and t$/o business cards
with the group's logo and
name. Four of the stickers
were found on the backs'
of signs, one was found
on a utility pole, and one
on a utility box next to
the street. The business
cards were found in the
grass next to an interior
sidewalk. All items were
located on public proP-erty,
not DePauw Univer-on
his orvn time," and is oPen
to everything, said Owen.
"To say that this is an
exceptional opportunity would
be a definite understatement,"
said senior Robert Sherman,
"not only will Media Fellows
benefit from interacting with
one of the best in the industrY,
but Management Fellows and
budding entrepreneurs will get
to meet the man who turned
a 2417 sports channel into a
multi billion dollar brand."
news@thedepauw.com
sity owned grounds.
Nally would not re-lease
the name of the or-ganization,
in an action
iimilar to other univer-sities
who have found
white nationalists adver-tisements
around their
campuses, as a way to
prevent publicizing the
group's agenda. The logo
founil on the items posted
on DePauw's campus was
a set of triangles.
On the same day, the
Journal Courier reported
that white-nationalist alt-right
group, Identity Ev-ropa,
plastered posters
and fliérs around Purdue
University on Sunday.
Identity Evropa formed
in 2016 and has begun a
public campaign aimed at
universities called "Pro- ject Siege" where the
þroup hoþes for the "be-ginning
of a long-term
õultural war of attrition
aeainst academia's Cul-türal
Marxist narrative,"
according to their web-site;
Identity Evropa's
logo is a set of triangles.
"There is no place in
the world for white na-tionalists
or anti sem-ites,"
President Mark Mc-
Coy said.
TDP llll l)l l),\l'\\'